Dubai Telegraph - Colombia, Guatemala learn from each other in rainforest preservation

EUR -
AED 3.814606
AFN 78.415845
ALL 99.726864
AMD 412.675093
ANG 1.871094
AOA 947.173661
ARS 1091.38173
AUD 1.669199
AWG 1.872017
AZN 1.769687
BAM 1.956944
BBD 2.096195
BDT 126.599749
BGN 1.957765
BHD 0.391529
BIF 3073.096669
BMD 1.038567
BND 1.408876
BOB 7.174091
BRL 6.063679
BSD 1.038192
BTN 89.881385
BWP 14.460245
BYN 3.397472
BYR 20355.916977
BZD 2.085389
CAD 1.507294
CDF 2963.032577
CHF 0.945143
CLF 0.03699
CLP 1020.662705
CNY 7.463875
CNH 7.59794
COP 4367.175045
CRC 523.698614
CUC 1.038567
CUP 27.522031
CVE 110.326846
CZK 25.180104
DJF 184.57457
DKK 7.461654
DOP 64.137498
DZD 140.46937
EGP 52.162976
ERN 15.578508
ETB 132.98733
FJD 2.411453
FKP 0.85535
GBP 0.836841
GEL 2.970708
GGP 0.85535
GHS 15.884057
GIP 0.85535
GMD 75.300121
GNF 8973.944144
GTQ 8.030695
GYD 217.20385
HKD 8.092184
HNL 26.447462
HRK 7.664156
HTG 135.799394
HUF 407.745458
IDR 16986.078007
ILS 3.712276
IMP 0.85535
INR 89.974971
IQD 1359.995114
IRR 43723.679179
ISK 146.698017
JEP 0.85535
JMD 163.730206
JOD 0.736556
JPY 161.001287
KES 134.186829
KGS 90.8231
KHR 4177.38195
KMF 491.086896
KPW 934.710589
KRW 1513.421283
KWD 0.320367
KYD 0.865193
KZT 537.956384
LAK 22586.879075
LBP 92969.011081
LKR 309.390884
LRD 206.597802
LSL 19.37863
LTL 3.066619
LVL 0.628219
LYD 5.096808
MAD 10.421193
MDL 19.383052
MGA 4827.752792
MKD 61.607882
MMK 3373.22573
MNT 3529.051432
MOP 8.333652
MRU 41.590316
MUR 48.449553
MVR 16.004713
MWK 1800.226492
MXN 21.477429
MYR 4.626857
MZN 66.375221
NAD 19.37863
NGN 1560.966848
NIO 38.202335
NOK 11.741745
NPR 143.809231
NZD 1.838446
OMR 0.399809
PAB 1.038192
PEN 3.862158
PGK 4.227329
PHP 60.774915
PKR 289.5784
PLN 4.218305
PYG 8188.78753
QAR 3.784413
RON 4.977892
RSD 117.122378
RUB 102.38466
RWF 1473.640272
SAR 3.895516
SBD 8.779725
SCR 15.593159
SDG 624.179235
SEK 11.499079
SGD 1.41066
SHP 0.85535
SLE 23.757264
SLL 21778.234665
SOS 593.338322
SRD 36.453193
STD 21496.24403
SVC 9.084005
SYP 13503.450624
SZL 19.366322
THB 35.080762
TJS 11.352473
TMT 3.645371
TND 3.315939
TOP 2.432432
TRY 37.228899
TTD 7.042015
TWD 34.21252
TZS 2648.346689
UAH 43.296671
UGX 3822.234649
USD 1.038567
UYU 44.926266
UZS 13470.875675
VES 60.624614
VND 26047.265193
VUV 123.300783
WST 2.908847
XAF 656.331241
XAG 0.033127
XAU 0.000371
XCD 2.80678
XDR 0.793637
XOF 656.318595
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.473449
ZAR 19.388544
ZMK 9348.35474
ZMW 29.043561
ZWL 334.418212
  • RBGPF

    2.7100

    64.91

    +4.18%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    7.49

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

Colombia, Guatemala learn from each other in rainforest preservation
Colombia, Guatemala learn from each other in rainforest preservation / Photo: JOHAN ORDONEZ - AFP

Colombia, Guatemala learn from each other in rainforest preservation

In the lush jungle of northern Guatemala -- in the largest protected area in Central America -- 30 leaders from Colombia's Amazon basin region are swapping strategies with local ethnic Maya farmers on how to live off this dense forest without destroying it.

Text size:

Under the soaring, leafy mahogany and cedar trees in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, the visiting group discusses ways to ensure the rain forest remains healthy, while studying the reserve-type model Guatemala has been developing since 1994.

Guatemala's vast sustainability project aims to achieve a balance in which communities reforest, cut down trees for timber in a controlled way, grow grains and vegetables, collect ornamental plants, and even develop low-impact tourism.

"That ensures that our communities are getting the economic resources that are also invested here for conservation," Sergio Balan, regional director of the National Council of Protected Areas (CONAP), told AFP in the village of Melchor de Mencos, near the border with Belize.

The Maya Biosphere Reserve sprawls over 2.1 million hectares (5.2 million acres) and borders Mexico and Belize.

Every year, its flora and fauna are threatened by fires, deforestation for agricultural and livestock purposes, and even drug traffickers.

Hundreds of archaeological sites are located in this territory, such as the ancient Mayan city of Tikal, one of the main tourist sites in Guatemala and the site hosting the visitors from the Forest Development and Biodiversity Centers of the Colombian Amazon.

In the reserve and near Tikal, there is also the pre-Hispanic park of Uaxactun, where both groups participated in a Mayan ceremony with a fire stoked with candles and tree resin.

The Colombian leaders, whose visit lasted a week, highlighted the achievements in reducing deforestation in the Colombian Amazon between 2021 and 2023, by 61 percent, according to data from Colombia's environment ministry.

- Farmer to farmer -

There are currently 16 active concessions that help conserve nearly 619,000 hectares of forest, CONAP says. Controlled logging permits, meanwhile, let private companies work for 25- or 30-year periods.

Concessions and reserves "not only provide employment, but also training for different jobs," says Erwin Maas, a Guatemalan tourist guide who is also familiar with forestry.

CONAP estimates that the concessions, a kind of activity grant, create about 150,000 direct and indirect jobs in the reserve.

Along one part of the path, visitors find a row of cut logs that are stacked to be taken to the sawmill. The wood comes from trees selected for felling in a controlled process that will allow the forest to regenerate.

Nearby, the sound of birds and monkeys fluttering through the branches, mixes with group's chatter.

"One of the great ideas we took away is the form of organization they have had (in Guatemala) to really last over time," says Aristides Oime, president of a Colombian farm group, Asojuntas de Cartagena del Chaira.

"From farmer to farmer, we see how we can really improve," he said. "We want to show how we truly believe that deforestation is not the way, the real route is environmental conservation."

The coordinator of the Colombia-based NGO Heart of the Amazon, Luz Rodriguez, believes that though there are differences with the Guatemalan communities, they learned lessons about how other people control land sustainably.

R.Mehmood--DT